All of the three below are free. There is no need to read text (besides quotation), but do view graphics where available.
(1) James Hookway and Tom Wright, Fall of Malaysia's Ruling Party Shakes US Ally; In power for six decades, it was undermined by a corruption scandal; new leaders signal shift in China policy. At page A1 (front page).
https://www.wsj.com/articles/fal ... u-s-ally-1525993571
Note:
(a) The online version carries photos but no graphic that appears in print. For the graphic, search images.google.com with (James Hookway and Tom Wright, Fall Malaysia) (no quotation marks); a vertical column comes up of four blue panels one stacked atop another. There is no legend in the column, so I supply here:
"Economic Progress[:] Malaysia's healthy growth has made the population better off but left them frustrated with the ruling party.
[panel 1's heading:] Gross domestic product[,] Pct [short for 'percentage'] change from a year earlier
[panel 2's heading:] Government debt as a percentage of GDP
[panel 3's heading:] GDP per capita, adjusted for price differences*
[panel 4's heading:] Pct of the population living below the national poverty line
* adjusted for purchase-power parity
Note: Estimate start in 2017 for government debt, in 2018 for GDP and GDP per capita
Sources: International Monetary Fund (GDP, debt, GDP per capita); World Bank (poverty)"
(b) Najib Razak was Malaysia's prime minister (Apr 3, 2009-May 10, 2018). Mahathir Mohamad (who started out as a rural doctor) was PM 1981-2003, followed by Abdullah Ahmad Badawi 2003-2009. All three belonged to the ruling party (but Mahathir Mohamad broke with the party to form an opposition party in 2017). In the 2008 federal election, the ruling party won but with a poor showing, so Badawi stepped down in 2009, paving the way for Razak, who led the ruling party to an electoral victory in 2013 to win a second PM term.
(c)
(i) "Malaysia is a constitutional monarchy with an elected monarch as head of state. * * * The constitutional marnach] is formally elected to a five-year term by and from the nine rulers of the Malay states (nine of the thirteen states of Malaysia that have hereditary royal rulers)." en.wikipedia.org for "Yang di-Pertuan Agong" (Malay for constitutional monarch.
(ii) "Elections in Malaysia exist at two levels: federal level and state level. * * * The Constitution of Malaysia requires that a general election must be held at least once every five years. However, the Prime Minister can ask the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to dissolve the Parliament at any time before this five-year period has expired." en.wikipedia.org for "elections in Malaysia."
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